Town Hall Meeting – Plant Branch Coal Ash Concerns, June 24

May 31, 2017 , Posted by Hyde Post

There will be a town hall meeting to discuss the dewatering (or draining) of coal ash waste ponds at Plant Branch in Milledgeville hosted by Representative Rick Williams on June 24. The town hall meeting is scheduled for 10 am to noon at Victory Baptist Church, 640 Meriweather Road, Milledgeville.

Coal ash is the waste byproduct left behind from burning coal for electricity, and contains toxic pollutants such as arsenic, mercury, selenium, chromium, and lead.

EPA has recognized that these pollutants concentrate up the food chain resulting in long-term damage to aquatic ecosystems.

Toxic wastewater discharged from the coal power plant industry is by far the largest category of industrial wastewater pollution, according to a detailed EPA studies. To put it in context, one-half of all the toxic water pollution released to the rivers of America comes from coal-fired electric plants.

As a retired coal fired power plant, Plant Branch stores millions of tons coal ash waste in its five ash ponds, in addition to impounded wastewater within many of the ponds.

Plant Branch sits adjacent to Lake Sinclair, a popular recreation site for boating, fishing, and swimming. The lake is home to residences, vacation rentals, campsites, picnic areas, a marina, and abundant aquatic life.

Georgia Power announced its plans to close these coal ash ponds, but it hasn’t disclosed many details beyond a general timeline to the public, nor to EPD.

To close the ponds, Georgia Power will need to drain, or dewater, the impounded wastewater held in these ponds.

Pond dewatering is of particular concern – the wastewater sitting in these ponds contains high concentrations of toxic pollutants. This is the wastewater that Georgia Power will pump into to Lake Sinclair through dewatering.

The town hall meeting will occur several days before a public hearing scheduled by the Environmental Protection Division on June 27 at 7 p.m. at the Putnam County Administrative Complex, 117 Putnam Drive, Eatonton, Ga. to receive comments on the draft permit that would allow Georgia Power to drain the ash ponds.

Found throughout the Altamaha watershed...from Macon and Milledgeville to the coast! ...

Okay all you “coasters”! We moved to Savannah almost three years ago and do a lot of gardening and enjoy some of the native volunteers that grow including some unusual mushrooms and fungus. But this is straight out of Ridley Scott’s “ALIEN” movie! There’s even an egg sack that they grow out of only to look in some cases like pulled Snow crab meat...just weird!! What is this???